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The Impact of Institutional Change on Internet Diffusion in Small Transition Economies. Meelis Kitsing PhD Candidate Department of Political Science University of Massachusetts Amherst mkitsing@polsci.umass.edu. Research Question. How do institutions affect
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The Impact of Institutional Change on Internet Diffusion in Small Transition Economies Meelis KitsingPhD Candidate Department of Political ScienceUniversity of MassachusettsAmherst mkitsing@polsci.umass.edu
Research Question How do institutions affect Internet diffusion in small transition economies? Coase Workshop 2004
Why researchthe Internet diffusion? • Public policy: enlargement of the European Union, the eEurope+ and eEurope programs, agendas of governments, international organizations and NGOs. • Political economy of transition • The performance of different political and economic systems (free markets vs. social democratic corporatism) • Role of institutions in economic performance • Market failures and public sector failures • Trade, FDI and technology transfer Coase Workshop 2004
Literature • Per capita GDP and Internet diffusion (Arnum and Conti 1998, Kiiski and Pohjola 2001, Beilock and Dimitrova 2003). • Infrastructure development and Internet diffusion (Arnum and Conti 1998, Beilock and Dimitrova 2003). • Competition policy and Internet diffusion (Dasgupta et al 2001). • Trade policy and technology transfer (Dollar 1993, Besley and Case 1993). • Telecom sector regulation (Taylor 2002, Heimler 2000) • Institutions and performance (North 1990, 1994). • Political Economy of Transition (Balcerowicz 1995) • Innovation and creative destruction (Schumpeter 1975) Coase Workshop 2004
Hypothesis • If the institutions increase overall economic openness in a country, the higher the potential to increase the number of Internet users per 10,000 inhabitants despite the country’s initial starting position, when holding everything else constant. Coase Workshop 2004
Methodology • A qualitative approach • Dependent variable is Internet penetration • Independent variables are institutions and their change • Broad: Path of Transition, Political Economy System, FDI Regime, and Trade Policy. • Sector-specific: Market Access in Telecom Sector, Privatization, Independence of Regulators. • Dynamic analysis: initial starting position is taken into account. Coase Workshop 2004
Explaining Internet Diffusion • Geography • Size of country • Per capita GDP • Political Openness • Infrastructure (Main Telephone Lines) • Number of personal computers • Internet Access Costs • Literacy Coase Workshop 2004
Findings • Little hope for specific Internet policy without broader changes. • Broader institutional framework matters • Open trade and FDI regime. • Telecom sector specific institutions • Independence of regulator – informal and formal. • Credible commitments to market opening and avoiding regulatory capture. • Privatization: not just if but how. • Even if monopoly exist in voice telephony, then liberalization of other services (data transmissions, ISPs, backbone providers et al) is crucial. Coase Workshop 2004